Remove installed packages before pip install

The release of pip10 has shown up a few issues here

Firstly, pip10 now refuses to overwrite distutils installed packages,
which includes "python-virtualenv" on centos.  History has shown us
that we want the packages installed and overwritten, to avoid the
packages coming back and messing things up.

Pre-install all the packages, then list the files in the packages with
"rpm" directly and remove them.  This way pip is happy to install.

We need to take better account of the package names for this; on
Fedora things have switch to "python2-virtualenv" instead of
"python-virtualenv" and we can't use an alias to list the package
contents.

This also highlighted that python2-pip is in EPEL for centos, so
enable that when we install it.  Make the epel element a no-op for non
centos/rhe distros.

There is a related change in recent fedora that python3 now installs
binaries into /usr/local/bin.  There are commented swizzles in here to
ensure we retain the status quo of "pip" and "virtualenv" both being
python2 based, with the python3 versions being called explicitly
"pip3" and "virtualenv3" respectively.

Change-Id: I2ffdd9f615ae6b00428c17249e4f216774991b99
This commit is contained in:
Ian Wienand 2018-04-16 13:16:35 +10:00
parent 0769bfd4aa
commit b423292cd0
5 changed files with 89 additions and 26 deletions

View File

@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ epel
This element installs the Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL)
repository GPG key as well as configuration for yum.
Note this element only works with platforms that have EPEL support
Note this element is only useful with platforms that have EPEL support
such as CentOS and RHEL
DIB_EPEL_MIRROR:

View File

@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
{
"distro": {
"centos7": {
"wget": "wget",
"yum-utils": "yum-utils"
},
"rhel7": {
"wget": "wget",
"yum-utils": "yum-utils"
}
},
"default": {
"wget": "",
"yum-utils": ""
}
}

View File

@ -25,7 +25,8 @@ else
;;
*)
echo "$DISTRO_NAME is not supported"
exit 1
# Not really a failure; we just don't do anything
exit 0
;;
esac
PKG_NAME=$(wget -q $URL -O - |grep -oE "(href=\"epel-release-$RELEASE-[0-9,.].*)" | cut -d'"' -f2)

View File

@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
dib-python
epel
install-types
package-installs
source-repositories

View File

@ -8,12 +8,31 @@ set -o pipefail
if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (opensuse|fedora|centos|centos7|rhel7) ]]; then
# Default packages
_do_py3=0
packages="python-virtualenv python-pip python-setuptools"
if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (fedora) ]]; then
_do_py3=1
packages+=" python3-virtualenv python3-pip python3-setuptools"
fi
_extra_repo=''
case "$DISTRO_NAME" in
centos*|rhel7)
# note python2-pip in epel
_extra_repo="--enablerepo=epel"
packages="python-virtualenv python2-pip python-setuptools"
;;
fedora)
_do_py3=1
packages="python2-virtualenv python2-pip python2-setuptools"
packages+=" python3-virtualenv python3-pip python3-setuptools"
;;
opensuse)
case "$DIB_RELEASE" in
42*)
packages="python-virtualenv python-pip python-setuptools"
;;
tumbleweed)
# XXX: python3?
packages="python2-virtualenv python2-pip python2-setuptools"
;;
esac
esac
# force things to happen so our assumptions hold
pip_args="-U --force-reinstall"
@ -30,36 +49,49 @@ if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (opensuse|fedora|centos|centos7|rhel7) ]]; then
if [[ $DISTRO_NAME = opensuse ]]; then
zypper -n install $packages
else
${YUM:-yum} install -y $packages
${YUM:-yum} ${_extra_repo} install -y $packages
fi
# pip10 (unlike earlier versions) will not uninstall distutils
# installed packages (note this is only a subset of packages that
# don't use setuptools for various reasons). We give it a little
# help by clearing out the files from the packages we are about to
# re-install so pip doesn't think anything is installed. See:
# https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4805
for pkg in $packages; do
rpm -ql $pkg | xargs rm -rf
done
# install the latest python2 pip; this overwrites packaged pip
python /tmp/get-pip.py ${pip_args}
# pip and setuptools are closely related; we want to ensure the
# latest for sanity. Because distro packages don't include enough
# info in the egg for pip to be certain it has fully uninstalled
# the old package, for safety we clear it out by hand (this seems
# to have been a problem with very old to new updates,
# e.g. centos6 to current-era, but less so for smaller jumps).
# There is a bit of chicken-and-egg problem with pip in that it
# requires setuptools for some operations, such as wheel creation.
# But just installing setuptools shouldn't require setuptools
# itself, so we are safe for this small section.
rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/setuptools*
# Install latest setuptools; there is a slight chicken-egg issue in
# that pip requires setuptools for some operations like building a
# wheel. But this simple install should be fine.
pip install ${pip_args} setuptools
if [[ $_do_py3 -eq 1 ]]; then
# Repeat above for python3
# python2 on fedora always installs into /usr/bin. Move pip2
# binary out, as we want "pip" in the final image to be
# python2 for historical reasons.
mv /usr/bin/pip /usr/bin/pip2
# You would think that installing python3 bits first, then
# python2 would work -- alas get-pip.py doesn't seem to leave
# python3 alone:
# https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4435
python3 /tmp/get-pip.py ${pip_args}
rm -rf /usr/lib/python3.?/site-packages/setuptools*
pip3 install ${pip_args} setuptools
# reclaim /usr/bin/pip back to pip2
# on < 27, this installed pip3 to /usr/bin/pip. On >=27 it's
# /usr/local/bin/pip. reclaim /usr/bin/pip back to pip2 and
# remove the /usr/local/bin/pip (i.e. python3 version) if it
# exists, so that "pip" calls pip2 always. if we want pip3 we
# call it explicitly.
ln -sf /usr/bin/pip2 /usr/bin/pip
rm -f /usr/local/bin/pip
fi
# now install latest virtualenv. it vendors stuff it needs so
@ -67,14 +99,27 @@ if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (opensuse|fedora|centos|centos7|rhel7) ]]; then
# python[2|3]-virtualenv package has installed versioned scripts
# (/usr/bin/virtualenv-[2|3]) but upstream does not! (see [2]).
# For consistency, clear them out and then reinstall so we're just
# left with python2's version
# [2] http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/python-virtualenv.git/tree/python-virtualenv.spec#n116)
rm /usr/bin/virtualenv*
# For consistency, reinstall so we're just left with python2's
# version. Note this is a rather moot point, the usual way we get
# a python3 environment is to call "virtualenv -p python3 foo" and
# that works to create a python3 virtualenv, even if using
# python2's version. Thus we probably don't *really* need to
# "pip3 install virtualenv". What we don't want is "virtualenv
# foo" creating a python3 virtualenv by default, because that
# confuses a lot of legacy code.
#
#[2] http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/python-virtualenv.git/tree/python-virtualenv.spec#n116)
pip install ${pip_args} virtualenv
mv /usr/bin/virtualenv /usr/bin/virtualenv2
if [[ $_do_py3 -eq 1 ]]; then
pip3 install ${pip_args} virtualenv
fi
pip install ${pip_args} virtualenv
# Reclaim virtualenv to virtualenv2; similar to above, on fedora
# >27 the pip3 version has gone into /usr/local/bin; remove it so
# only /usr/bin/virtualenv exists
ln -sf /usr/bin/virtualenv2 /usr/bin/virtualenv
rm -f /usr/local/bin/virtualenv
# at this point, we should have the latest
# pip/setuptools/virtualenv packages for python2 & 3, and